Ethics Beyond the Body: Descartes and Heidegger in Emmanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Ethics Beyond the Body: Descartes and Heidegger in Emmanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity"

Transcription

1 UCLA Paroles gelées Title Ethics Beyond the Body: Descartes and Heidegger in Emmanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity Permalink Journal Paroles gelées, 17(2) ISSN Author Kleinberg, Ethan Publication Date Peer reviewed escholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California

2 ETHICS BEYOND THE BODY: DESCARTES AND HEIDEGGER IN EMMANUEL LEVINAS^S TOTALITY AND INFINITY Ethan Kleinberg is a recent Ph.D. from the Department of History at the University ofcalifornia, hos Angeles. In his these de doctorat, published in 1961 as Totalite et Infini, Emmanuel Levinas sought to interrogate and rethink the Western philosophical tradition, which he saw as a tradition of Totality, and to shift the emphasis of his project away from a concern with the body as the locus of representation, and towards an understanding of the Other.' In doing so Levinas works from Martin Heidegger's critique of Western metaphysics by removing the emphasis on the ego cogito from the center of the equation but he does not follow Heidegger in shifting the emphasis of his investigation toward Being. Instead, Levinas discovers an unexpected ally in the implementation of a Heideggerian critique of metaphysics. Levinas turns to Rene Descartes as understood through Heidegger's critique of intellectualism in order to shift the focus of his argument from an emphasis on the primacy of the "I" as located in the body, to an emphasis on the exterior relation to the Other. This is not the Descartes employed by Edmund Husserl or Jean-Paul Sartre but instead the Descartes of the "Third Meditation." In Descartes's reflections on the relation of the finite to the infinite, Levinas saw the key to escaping the concept of Totality that had dominated Western philosophy from Plato to Heidegger: It is true that I have the idea of substance in me in virtue of the fact that I am a substance; but this would not account for my having the idea of an infinite substance. 43

3 Ethan Kleinberg when I am finite, unless tiiis idea proceeded from some substance whicii really was infinite. (Descartes 31) This utilization of Descartes implies a return to intellectualism as in the work of Husserl since it relies on the "idea of infinity" as produced by an "I think," but what is significant for Levinas is precisely the limited nature of intellectualism as shown in Heidegger's critique of representation. For Levinas, the idea of infinity exceeds the limits of representations, it exceeds the body in which it is produced and thus puts the primacy of the ego cogito, as the source of thought and representation, in permanent question. Levinas works with and against Heidegger in his use of Descartes to remove the primacy of the "I" (which was also Heidegger's project) but without removing the "I" as the source of cognition and prime locus of philosophy (which is antithetical to Heidegger's project). This conservation of the radical singularity of the "I" is more than a movement away from the ontology of Being as in Heidegger because it also serves to break with the program of Totality that seeks to incorporate the "I" into a larger model or system, be it positivism, neo-kantian rationalism, or the Hegelian concept of Absolute Knowledge. Levinas opposes his understanding of Infinity to the traditional understanding of Totality, a concept structurally linked to all totalizing projects based on thematization and representation. Their source is ultimately the body of the subject (the Same), the meter by which all else is measured. Totalizing structures, while necessary for society to exist, are potentially devastating and disastrous if the rule of Totality banishes Infinity, which Levinas characterizes as the source of all ethics and as exterior to the body. Thus there is much at stake for Levinas who explains, in astonishing understatement, that his critique of Totality "came, in effect, after a political experience that we have not forgotten" (Ethique 73)} The primary reference is to National Socialism. Totality and Infinity Totality and Infinity is an especially difficult book because it serves both as a critique and rehabilitation of Western philoso- 44

4 Ethics Beyond the Body phy. Thus the book does not serve as a clean break with the Western metaphysical tradition, as in Heidegger's "Letter on Humanism," but is rather an attempt to reread Western philosophy in a new light, shifting the emphasis through an internal critique of the Western philosophical tradition. While relying heavily on the work of Heidegger as the source of his critique of traditional intellectualist and theoretical philosophy, Levinas mobilizes this revised understanding of intellectualist philosophy against Heidegger. Unlike Heidegger, Levinas does not want to displace the intellectualist tradition but instead to reread it in light of its limitations as presented in Heidegger's critique of representation. Levinas's goal is not to remove the subject from philosophical investigation but to put it in question permanently. For these reasons Totality and Infinity is also an extremely difficult book to explicate because it folds in on itself. The concept of Totality, which Levinas sets up in opposition to Infinity as the all encompassing unity that seeks to remove all singularity in the need to establish a universal whole and from which the singular being must separate itself, turns out to be based on the model of that separated being as manifested in the body, the locus of representation. Thus one cannot consider this model in any sort of progressive or teleological fashion but only as an ambiguous relation. To understand the relation of Levinas's work to Heidegger's and to Descartes's, and his break with traditional French philosophy, we must fust tiy to establish the two categories of Totality and Infinity as understood by Levinas and then read Levinas's understanding of the place of the finite being, the subject, back into these two categories so that we can see how Levinas attempts to redefine metaphysics as ethics in a way that uses Heidegger's philosophy to re-think Descartes. Totality For Levinas, Totality describes the essence of the Western philosophical tradition. As the basis for politics, war, and most institutions in society. Totality is the system of Universal Reason that attempts to codify everything within a unifying theory or practice. As such, Levinas portrays Totality as the tyranny of the Same, whereas. Infinity is characterized as the opening to alter- 45

5 Ethan Kleinberg ity. In the critique of Totality which comports the association between the two words (Totality and Infinity) there is a reference to the history of philosophy. This history can be interpreted as a tendency toward Universal synthesis. It is a reduction of all experience and all that is sensible to a Totality that engulfs the world and does not let anything outside in, so that consciousness becomes absolute thought. This tendency toward Totality can be traced to the model of the individual subject, as manifested in the body, from which it extrapolated. Particular experience becomes Universal synthesis on the basis of thematization and representation: "the consciousness of the self is at the same time consciousness of everything.... There are very few protestations against this totalization in the history of philosophy" (Ethique 69). For Levinas, all is systems of thought that aspire to pure reason or Absolute Knowledge are examples of this totalizing tendency, which seeks to make that which is Other conform to the rules of the Same. "The T is identical in its very alterations. It represents them to itself and thinks them. The universal identity in which the heterogeneous can be embraced has the ossature [framework] of a subject, of the first person. Universal thought is an T think'" (Totality 36). Universal thought does not open to the Other but represents what is other as recognizable to the same. In the Hegelian system where the "I" confronts the Other the encounter between the "I" and the Other is not based on a desire to understand difference but instead on the desire to define and possess the Other in relation to the "I." The Desire for Recognition, as in Alexandre Kojeve's presentation in his Introduction to the Reading of Hegel, is a desire that the Other recognize you at the value you feel you are worth. It is not a desire to discover the worth of the Other. The fact that the encounter leads either to Mastery or Slavery shows that this model is based on "the possibility of possessing, that is, of suspending the very alterity of what is only at first Other, and Other relative to me" which is "the way of the Same" (Totality 38). The totalizing tendency goes beyond philosophies of conflict (such as Hegel's dialectic); even Utopian, positivist, or idealist philosophies that deal only with Universal Principles are sites of 46

6 Ethics Beyond the Body Totality. What makes Totality so dangerous is that it rests in the guise of such formulas as the "universal rights of man," and thus appears to be the basis of morality, when in fact it suppresses any possibility of morals. Absolute Knowledge as it has been researched, promised, or presented by philosophy is a thinking of Equals. In "truth" Being is engulfed. Even if "truth" is considered as never definite it still promises a truth that is more complete and more absolute. There is no doubt that because we are finite beings we could never achieve this task, but on the basis by which this task is attempted it consists in making the Other become the Same. {Ethique 85) For Levinas, the project of Totality is the project of equivocation, of creating categories of definition based on perception, specifically vision. It is a process of objectification and classification that removes all that is particular and different in order to create a universal system of representation. Even in the critique of Totality it is still possible to embrace it. This is the nature of Levinas's claim against Heidegger whom Levinas credits as supplying the critique of representation and the intellectualist tradition of theory centered in the "I" and the body of the subject. While Levinas agrees with Heidegger's critique of the limitations of intellectualism, Levinas did not believe Heidegger had escaped the influence of Totality. Levinas sees Heidegger's removal of the subject, Cartesian cogito, as playing into the hands of the totalizing tendency. For Levinas, Heidegger's removal of the primacy of the subject would have been significant if it had opened the clearing to the Other. Instead, Heidegger removed the "I" and shifted his focus to the question of anonymous Being, in effect denying the possibility of primacy to either the "I" or the Other. For Heidegger, Being is primary. According to Levinas, Heidegger's ontology of Being is a structure of Totality because it subsumes all beings under the rubric of an anonymous and total Being that is complete unto itself. "The relation with Being that is enacted as ontology consists in neutralizing the existent in order to comprehend or grasp it. It is 47

7 Ethan Kleinberg hence not a relation with the Other as such but the reduction of the Other to the Same" (Totality 45-6). Levinas sees Heidegger's critique of the Western metaphysical tradition as valid but sees Heidegger's philosophical project as removing any possibility for an ethics, precisely by focusing on Being and thereby removing the subject from the equation. For Levinas, this emphasis on anonymous Being can only lead to the domination of particular beings by the general category of Being. By removing the subject Heidegger removes the locus of any encounter with the Other, obviating ethics. In his emphasis on Being, Heidegger seeks to avoid egocentric subjectivity, while for Levinas "alterity is only possible starting from me" (Totality 40). This is to say that it is only from the position of the subject, the me, in relation to the Other that an engagement with the Other as Other becomes possible. What makes this structure difficult to grasp is that while the encounter with the Other can only occur in relation to the particular subject, the particular subject (the "I") is the basis for the philosophy of Totality which seeks to subsume the Other as part of the Same through universal thematization and objectification. Levinas claims that the tendency toward Totality is based on a misreading because "the common element that allows me to speak of an objective society by which man comes to resemble an object is not the fust" (Ethique 72). This is to say there is a moment prior to the construction of "objective society" that is the basis on which we have society. This leads Levinas to question whether "the social, with its institutions, Universal forms, and laws, comes to limit the consequences of war between man, or whether it limits the infinite that opens the ethical relation between man and man?" (Ethique 75). For Levinas, the answer is clearly the latter. But society cannot simply be dismissed: universal reason based on representation and thematization is necessary for human beings to exist collectively. A society could not exist without recourse to general rules or codes that define the parameters of that society. Levinas is not suggesting dismissal of the concept of Totality but rather a rethinking of that concept in relation to Infinity, without which the outwardly directed but self-absorbed project of Totality, whose prime goal is to organize 48

8 Ethics Beyond the Body men and things into structures of power and thus give them control over nature and each other, goes completely unchecked and completely outside the realm of the ethical (Poirie 12). While organization and objectification are necessary at some level, this project can have horrendous repercussions if left unchecked. In response to the unbridled rule of Totality, Levinas offers the possibility of Infinity. Infinity According to Levinas, Infinity is the most difficult concept to grasp precisely because it is not graspable. Infinity is beyond representation and thematization and thus completely beyond what is comfortable or controllable for a finite being. We have recourse to Infinity but not to the understanding of Infinity. It presents itself in forms like Levinas's construct of the // y a, which is the rumbling of infinite and anonymous Being and as such is beyond any particular subject. Levinas also offers the model of the elements (earth, sky, wind, sea), which imply the infinite to us in our finite understanding of the world; we cannot grasp the elements as we grasp an object. They are not representable. We name them but, according to Levinas, we cannot thematize them. They always exceed our attempts to contain them: The navigator who makes use of the sea and the wind dominates these elements but does not thereby transform them into things. They retain the indetermination of elements despite the precision of the laws that govern them, which can be known and taught. The element has no form containing; it is content without form.... The depth of the element prolongs it till it is lost in the earth and the heavens. "Nothing ends, nothing begins." (7btality 131) The elements and the // y a, which are closely related, imply Infinity but they do not announce it. This is to say that the presence of Infinity is felt in our everyday life, but as anxiety, unease, and discomfort, because it is a feeling of lack of control. We flee from this anxiety that is produced by the // >' a and the 49

9 Ethan Kleinberg elements, seeking refuge in the totalizing structures that give us the illusion that we are in control over the world. Thus in confronting the elements or the // }' «we do not recognize the Infinite but only the menace of the unknown. Levinas presents us with a seemingly paradoxical structure; the exteriority of Infinity is unrepresentable, entirely beyond the grasp of finite being, but at the same time it is the only means by which the "I" can engage the Other in its alterity without reducing it to the Same. But if the Infinite does not present itself for thematization because it is unrepresentable, how can we have recourse to the Infinite that the Infinite is and thus to ethics? Levinas's answer is the original moment prior to finite being, prior to the body, prior to representation, and prior to Totality. Infinity is always already there for us as implied in the elements. The question thus becomes how we recognize the Infinite: how do we recognize that which is beyond our capacities for recognition? Here Levinas turns to Descartes and doubles back on his own critique of Totality to reread the philosophical tradition and articulate how we come to engage the moment, prior to Totality, which is the realm of Infinity. It is true that I have the idea of substance in me in virtue of the fact that I am a substance; but this would not account for my having the idea of an infinite substance, when I am finite, unless this idea proceeded from some substance which really was infinite. (Descartes 31) For Levinas, the realization of Infinity can occur only through the intellectual act of reflection, which requires a cogito, as Husserl pointed out, but for Levinas a cogito understood as limited in its capacity. For Levinas, Infinity lies outside of the realm of equivocation and thematization, which is the realm of the Same extrapolated from the body of the finite being, and thus stands as entirely Other. The cogito can think the idea of Infinity but our idea of Infinity is necessarily inadequate, as Descartes shows. For Levinas, all other ideas can be made to fit into a Husserlian model of intentionality, but the idea of Infinity exposes the limited nature of representation: 50

10 Ethics Beyond the Body The idea of Infinity is exceptional in tiiat its ideatum surpasses its idea, whereas for the things the total coincidence of their 'objective' and 'formal' realities is not precluded; we could conceivably have accounted for all the ideas, other than that of Infinity, by ourselves. {Totality 49) The idea of Infinity does not come from the interior but somehow from the outside. The idea of Infinity punctures the Self as that which is always the Same and opens it to that which comes from outside, to that which is totally Other. "Infinity is characteristic of a transcendent being as transcendent; the infinite is the absolutely Other" {Totality 49). By returning to the intellectualist tradition through his critique of Totality, Levinas presents the relationship with Infinity that comes to us in our relationship with the Other as the relationship between a specific ego cogito and that which exceeds it and thus places its primacy in question. For Levinas, this rapport between the Same and the Other can only occur to a thinking being capable of reflection. This relationship with Infinity is not produced by the thinking being the "I" does not escape Totality by itself. Instead, it is produced by the Other, which pierces the "I" and breaks Totality. "It is not T who resists the system, as Kierkegaard thought; it is the Other" {Totality 40). Thus as Levinas presents it, it is the presence of the Other that produces the idea of Infinity in the isolated subject (the Same). This is because the Other is beyond me, completely exterior to me, and resists thematization and objectification. Whereas Totality attempts to incorporate the Other as the Same, Infinity opens up the possibility of accepting the Other in all its alterity and as such calls into question the primacy of the "I" (the Same). At this moment the "I" must relinquish its dominant position as "the measure of all things" in favor of the Other that Levinas considers the origin of ethics. "The idea of Totality and the idea of Infinity differ precisely in that the first is purely theoretical, while the second is moral" {Totality 83). But the ideas of Totality and Infinity are thus linked because the separated finite being requires the realm of the theoretical to produce the idea of the 51

11 Ethan Kleinberg infinite which comes from the Other and places the idea of Totality in question. Infinity occurs only after reflection in the model of Husserl's "consciousness of," but reflection is not sufficient to contain Infinity. The importance of Heidegger's critique of intellectualism is that it allows Levinas to conserve a space for Infinity in the realm that is beyond representation. Like in Heidegger, Levinas does not jettison intellectualism but returns to it through a nuanced reading based on Heidegger's critique. The idea of Infinity does not proceed from the I, nor from a need in the I gauging exactly its own voids; here the movement proceeds from what is thought and not from the thinker. It is the unique knowledge that presents this inversion a knowledge without a prior. The idea of Infinity is revealed, in the strong sense of the term.... Infinity is not the "object" of a cognition (which would be to reduce it to the measure of the gaze that contemplates), but is that which is approachable by a thought that at each instant thinks more than it thinks. {Totality 61-2) This construction is not Husserlian, because the contemplative act is inverted so that the cogito does not produce the idea of Infinity as in the concept of intentionality. But it is certainly not Heideggerian either because the emphasis is still on a cogito and the intellectual process in the model of intentionality. Instead, this model is based on the breach of the separated finite being, the Same, which occurs in the idea of Infinity which is produced in the relation with the Other. This is the moment of discourse. "Truth arises where a being separated from the Other is not engulfed in him, but speaks to him. Language, which does not touch the Other, even tangentially, reaches the Other by calling upon him or by commanding him or by obeying him, with all the straightforwardness (droiture) of these relations" {Totality 62). According to Levinas, man's principal and originary relationship is not with finitude, as Heidegger had supposed, but instead with language. But language is also dangerous because it necessarily leads to thematization, which is the realm of the 52

12 Ethics Beyond the Body Same. Language is always in danger of degrading and becoming a mechanism of the Same that removes the alterity of the Other. For Levinas, what is essential in language is that it is given. Its use already implies the Other in all its alterity. Language ruptures interiority, pierces the body, and opens separated finite being up to the hifinite through the act of speech, which implies the Other. Language is always more than it is and thus always implies the infinite. Language is a constant calling into question of the primacy of the Self in the face of the Other who gives me language: "A calling into question of the Same which cannot occur within the egoist spontaneity of the Same is brought about by the Other. We name this calling into question of my spontaneity by the presence of the Other 'ethics'" {Totality 43). The presence of the Other is announced in discourse, which presupposes all of the other social structures that exist under the rubric of Totality. Thus the calling into question of the self by the presence of the Other as manifested in language is the primary moment of philosophy and society and affirms the primacy of ethics. Language announces the Other in its alterity and thus it places the Self in question, and by placing the Self in question it opens up the possibility of an ethical society based on alterity instead of homogeneity. "The relation of the face to face both announces a society and permits the maintaining of a separated T" {Totality 67-8). Thus for Levinas, community is not originally established on the model of Totality but on the basis of the face-to-face, which is the model of alterity. Levinas wants to rethink society in light of this revelation which presupposes the relation with the Other, Infinity. Levinas does not want to break with metaphysics but to reread it through his conception of ethics. Our understanding of concepts like Desire, Freedom, Responsibility, and Language can then take account of the primacy of Infinity and the necessity of thinking alterity, and only then can philosophy break the grip of Totality and present the possibility of an ethical society. But Levinas does not present this rethinking in the form of a prescription or programmatic imperative. This would be a return to the model of the Same. Instead Levinas attempts to construct a system based on that which cannot be thematized or object- 53

13 Ethan Kleinberg ivized. It is not a program of political engagement but of philosophical instruction, a teaching that offers the possibility of more than it says. In this light Levinas is able to reevaluate such structures as work, economy, the state, and even philosophy based on the idea of Infinity (the Other) and not on the idea of Totality (the Same). In this sense, Levinas's work is the systematic development of an understanding that had never been thought through before {Totality 19). Levinas presents a system based entirely on difference, not homogeneity. Thus Levinas challenges all of the previous Western philosophical traditions to rethink their projects in light of the possibility of Infinity, the possibility of alterity. Conclusion Levinas's attempt to move beyond the Western metaphysical tradition by rehabilitating the very meaning of metaphysics is especially interesting in Levinas's use of Descartes, as filtered through Heidegger, to displace the primacy of the ego cogito in favor of the Other. But Levinas's work also opens up the possibility of rereading the Western philosophical tradition in the light of an ethics of alterity, plurality, and difference. Levinas turned away from traditional philosophy and the work of Heidegger to engage what he felt was the most pressing issue of philosophy in the wake of the Shoah, namely an understanding of the ethical relation with the Other. Rather than turning away from metaphysics, Levinas sought instead to redefine metaphysics as first and foremost ethics but as ethics which come from the Other: an ethical system from beyond the body of the subject. 1^ «^ 54

14 . Totality Ethics Beyond the Body Notes ' This paper is based on an investigation I began in chapter eight of my dissertation, The Reception of Martin Heidegger's Philosophy in France: , diss., UCLA, 1998 (Ann Arbor: UMI, 1998). ^ All translations from Ethiqiie et Infini are my own. Works Cited Descartes, Rene. Meditations on First Philosophy. Trans. John Cottingham. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, Levinas, Emmanuel. Ethique et Infini. Paris: Fayard, and Infinity. Trans. Alphonso Lingis. Pittsburgh: Duquesne UP, Poire, Francois. Entretien avec Emmanuel Levinas. Paris: La Manufacture,

15 Le Corps et UEsprit in French Cultural Production Paroles Gelees UCLA French Studies Special Issue Volume Selected Proceedings from UCLA French Graduate Students ' Fourth Annual Interdisciplinary Conference

16

17 Le Corps et UEsprit in French Cultural Production Selected Proceedings from The UCLA French Department Graduate Students' Fourth Annual Interdisciplinary Conference April 16-18, 1999 Ce serait le moment de philosopher et de rechercher si, par hasard, se trouvait ici Vendroit ou de telles paroles degelent. Rabelais, Le Quart Livre Paroles Gelees Special Issue UCLA French Studies Volume

18 Editor-in-Chief: Vanessa H. Arnaud Assistant Editors: Editorial Board: Holly Gilbert Julie Masi Alison Rice Jeff Spisak Loli Tsan Sponsors: Albert and Elaine Borchard Foundation Consulat General de France, Los Angeles UCLA Department of French UCLA European Studies Program UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies UCLA Center for Modern and Contemporary Studies Campus Programs Committee of the Programs Activities Board Graduate Students Association Paroles Gelees was established in 1983 by its founding editor, Kathryn Bailey. The journal is managed and edited by the French Graduate Students' Association and published annually under the auspices of the Department of French at UCLA. Information regarding the submission of articles and subscriptions is available from the journal office: Paroles Gelees UCLA Department of French 212 Royce Hall, Box Los Angeles, CA (310) Subscription price (per issue): $12 for individuals $14 for institutions $16 for international orders Back issues available. For a listing, see our home page at Cover illustration of Femme a I'eventail (1908) by Picasso. Reproduced by permission of The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg. Copyright 2000 by the Regents of the University of California ISSN

19 CONTENTS Acknowledgments v "I am a Woman": The Body as Background in The Second Sex 1 Toril Moi Response to Toril Moi 20 Lynn Hunt Response totoril Moi 23 Malina Stefanovska The Devil in Drag: Moral Injunction or Social Leaven? Till Boon Ethics Beyond the Body: Descartes and Heidegger in Emmanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity 43 Ethan Kleinherg Incarnating Decadence: Reading Des Esseintes's Bodies 56 Wanda Klee Body, Blindness, and Re-Memory: The Struggle for a Post-Colonial Understanding of Identity 69 Anne-Lancaster Badders 111

20 Contents La blessure dans I'oeuvre de Serge Doubrovsky 78 Elizabeth Molkou Bodies of Knowledge in Two Old French Fabliaux 91 Natalie Miiiioz Esprits animaux ou Esprit bete tout court? 99 Marie-Christine McCarthy Conference Program 112 Call for Papers 116 Ordering Information 117 IV

THE FICHTEAN IDEA OF THE SCIENCE OF KNOWLEDGE. by Jean Hyppolite*

THE FICHTEAN IDEA OF THE SCIENCE OF KNOWLEDGE. by Jean Hyppolite* 75 76 THE FICHTEAN IDEA OF THE SCIENCE OF KNOWLEDGE AND THE HUSSERLIAN PROJECT by Jean Hyppolite* Translated from the French by Tom Nemeth Introduction to Hyppolite. The following article by Hyppolite

More information

Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte

Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte Maria Pia Mater Thomistic Week 2018 Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte Introduction Cornelio Fabro s God in Exile, traces the progression of modern atheism from its roots in the cogito of Rene

More information

Études Ricœuriennes / Ricœur Studies, Vol 6, No 2 (2015), pp ISSN (online) DOI /errs

Études Ricœuriennes / Ricœur Studies, Vol 6, No 2 (2015), pp ISSN (online) DOI /errs Michael Sohn, The Good of Recognition: Phenomenology, Ethics, and Religion in the Thought of Lévinas and Ricœur (Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press, 2014), pp. 160. Eileen Brennan Dublin City University,

More information

Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1. By Tom Cumming

Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1. By Tom Cumming Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1 By Tom Cumming Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics represents Martin Heidegger's first attempt at an interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (1781). This

More information

Published Citation Sealey, Kris. (2011). Desire as Disruption, Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory, Vol. 11(3), Fall 2011, pp

Published Citation Sealey, Kris. (2011). Desire as Disruption, Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory, Vol. 11(3), Fall 2011, pp Fairfield University DigitalCommons@Fairfield Philosophy Faculty Publications Philosophy Department 10-1-2011 Desire as Disruption Kris Sealey Fairfield University, ksealey@fairfield.edu Copyright 2011

More information

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10.

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10. Introduction This book seeks to provide a metaethical analysis of the responsibility ethics of two of its prominent defenders: H. Richard Niebuhr and Emmanuel Levinas. In any ethical writings, some use

More information

Death and Discourse: An Inquiry into Meaning and Disruption James R. Goebel California State University, Fullerton

Death and Discourse: An Inquiry into Meaning and Disruption James R. Goebel California State University, Fullerton Death and Discourse: An Inquiry into Meaning and Disruption James R. Goebel California State University, Fullerton Abstract: In Being and Nothingness, Jean-Paul Sartre vehemently argues that we must assume

More information

Introducing Levinas to Undergraduate Philosophers

Introducing Levinas to Undergraduate Philosophers This paper was originally presented as a colloquy paper to the Undergraduate Philosophy Association at the University of Texas at Austin, 1990. Since putting this paper online in 1995, I have heard from

More information

1/12. The A Paralogisms

1/12. The A Paralogisms 1/12 The A Paralogisms The character of the Paralogisms is described early in the chapter. Kant describes them as being syllogisms which contain no empirical premises and states that in them we conclude

More information

Chapter 25. Hegel s Absolute Idealism and the Phenomenology of Spirit

Chapter 25. Hegel s Absolute Idealism and the Phenomenology of Spirit Chapter 25 Hegel s Absolute Idealism and the Phenomenology of Spirit Key Words: Absolute idealism, contradictions, antinomies, Spirit, Absolute, absolute idealism, teleological causality, objective mind,

More information

Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology

Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology Volume Two, Number One Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology Alain Badiou The fundamental problem in the philosophical field today is to find something like a new logic. We cannot begin by

More information

7/31/2017. Kant and Our Ineradicable Desire to be God

7/31/2017. Kant and Our Ineradicable Desire to be God Radical Evil Kant and Our Ineradicable Desire to be God 1 Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) Kant indeed marks the end of the Enlightenment: he brought its most fundamental assumptions concerning the powers of

More information

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies ST503 LESSON 16 of 24 John S. Feinberg, Ph.D. Experience: Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. At

More information

3 Supplement. Robert Bernasconi

3 Supplement. Robert Bernasconi 3 Supplement Robert Bernasconi In Of Grammatology Derrida took up the term supplément from his reading of both Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Claude Lévi-Strauss and used it to formulate what he called the

More information

SPINOZA, SUBSTANCE, AND SUBJECTIVITY IN HEGEL S LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION

SPINOZA, SUBSTANCE, AND SUBJECTIVITY IN HEGEL S LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION SPINOZA, SUBSTANCE, AND SUBJECTIVITY IN HEGEL S LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION Anna Madelyn Hennessey, University of California Santa Barbara T his essay will assess Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

More information

Some Notes Toward a Genealogy of Existential Philosophy Robert Burch

Some Notes Toward a Genealogy of Existential Philosophy Robert Burch Some Notes Toward a Genealogy of Existential Philosophy Robert Burch Descartes - ostensive task: to secure by ungainsayable rational means the orthodox doctrines of faith regarding the existence of God

More information

TEILHARD DE CHARDIN, A. N. WHITEHEAD AND A METAPHYSICS OF INTERSUBJECTIVITY

TEILHARD DE CHARDIN, A. N. WHITEHEAD AND A METAPHYSICS OF INTERSUBJECTIVITY TEILHARD DE CHARDIN, A. N. WHITEHEAD AND A METAPHYSICS OF INTERSUBJECTIVITY Almost forty years ago, Ian Barbour wrote an article entitled Teilhard s Process Metaphysics which was originally published in

More information

Canadian Society for Continental Philosophy

Canadian Society for Continental Philosophy Provided by the author(s) and NUI Galway in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite the published version when available. Title Steven Crowell - Normativity and Phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger

More information

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair FIRST STUDY The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair I 1. In recent decades, our understanding of the philosophy of philosophers such as Kant or Hegel has been

More information

THE STUDY OF UNKNOWN AND UNKNOWABILITY IN KANT S PHILOSOPHY

THE STUDY OF UNKNOWN AND UNKNOWABILITY IN KANT S PHILOSOPHY THE STUDY OF UNKNOWN AND UNKNOWABILITY IN KANT S PHILOSOPHY Subhankari Pati Research Scholar Pondicherry University, Pondicherry The present aim of this paper is to highlights the shortcomings in Kant

More information

CHRISTIAN MORALITY: A MORALITY OF THE DMNE GOOD SUPREMELY LOVED ACCORDING TO jacques MARITAIN AND john PAUL II

CHRISTIAN MORALITY: A MORALITY OF THE DMNE GOOD SUPREMELY LOVED ACCORDING TO jacques MARITAIN AND john PAUL II CHRISTIAN MORALITY: A MORALITY OF THE DMNE GOOD SUPREMELY LOVED ACCORDING TO jacques MARITAIN AND john PAUL II Denis A. Scrandis This paper argues that Christian moral philosophy proposes a morality of

More information

In Search of a Political Ethics of Intersubjectivity: Between Hannah Arendt, Emmanuel Levinas and the Judaic

In Search of a Political Ethics of Intersubjectivity: Between Hannah Arendt, Emmanuel Levinas and the Judaic Ausgabe 1, Band 4 Mai 2008 In Search of a Political Ethics of Intersubjectivity: Between Hannah Arendt, Emmanuel Levinas and the Judaic Anna Topolski My dissertation explores the possibility of an approach

More information

Chapter 24. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: The Concepts of Being, Non-being and Becoming

Chapter 24. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: The Concepts of Being, Non-being and Becoming Chapter 24 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: The Concepts of Being, Non-being and Becoming Key Words: Romanticism, Geist, Spirit, absolute, immediacy, teleological causality, noumena, dialectical method,

More information

METAPHYSICS IN DERRIDA AND LEVINAS

METAPHYSICS IN DERRIDA AND LEVINAS METAPHYSICS IN DERRIDA AND LEVINAS Dr. Chung Chin-Yi Research scholar, National University of Singapore Singapore Abstract In this paper I have examined Ricoeur and Levinas turn to an ethical phenomenology

More information

Ethical Differentiation in Levinas, Kierkegaard and Kant

Ethical Differentiation in Levinas, Kierkegaard and Kant In my book, Levinas beyond the Horizons of Cartesianism, and my paper, Kant and the Problem of Ethical Metaphysics, I promise to show how Kierkegaard provides a solution to ethical problems raised by the

More information

The Problem of Choice

The Problem of Choice The Problem of Choice Existence and Transcendence in the Philosophy of Jaspers Jean Wahl Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy - Revue de la philosophie française et de langue française, Vol XXIV,

More information

DEONTOLOGY AND MORAL RESPONSIBILITY

DEONTOLOGY AND MORAL RESPONSIBILITY Current Ethical Debates UNIT 2 DEONTOLOGY AND MORAL RESPONSIBILITY Contents 2.0 Objectives 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Good Will 2.3 Categorical Imperative 2.4 Freedom as One of the Three Postulates 2.5 Human

More information

Copyright 2000 Vk-Cic Vahe Karamian

Copyright 2000 Vk-Cic Vahe Karamian Kant In France and England, the Enlightenment theories were blueprints for reforms and revolutions political and economic changes came together with philosophical theory. In Germany, the Enlightenment

More information

The Greatest Mistake: A Case for the Failure of Hegel s Idealism

The Greatest Mistake: A Case for the Failure of Hegel s Idealism The Greatest Mistake: A Case for the Failure of Hegel s Idealism What is a great mistake? Nietzsche once said that a great error is worth more than a multitude of trivial truths. A truly great mistake

More information

Phil 114, Wednesday, April 11, 2012 Hegel, The Philosophy of Right 1 7, 10 12, 14 16, 22 23, 27 33, 135, 141

Phil 114, Wednesday, April 11, 2012 Hegel, The Philosophy of Right 1 7, 10 12, 14 16, 22 23, 27 33, 135, 141 Phil 114, Wednesday, April 11, 2012 Hegel, The Philosophy of Right 1 7, 10 12, 14 16, 22 23, 27 33, 135, 141 Dialectic: For Hegel, dialectic is a process governed by a principle of development, i.e., Reason

More information

Perspectival Methods in Metaphysics

Perspectival Methods in Metaphysics Perspectival Methods in Metaphysics Mark Ressler February 24, 2012 Abstract There seems to be a difficulty in the practice of metaphysics, in that any methodology used in metaphysical study relies on certain

More information

Affirmative Judgments: The Sabbath of Deconstruction

Affirmative Judgments: The Sabbath of Deconstruction University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Faculty Publications -- Department of English English, Department of 2010 Affirmative Judgments: The Sabbath of Deconstruction

More information

COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding

COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding Alain Badiou, Professor Emeritus (École Normale Supérieure, Paris) Prefatory Note by Simon Critchley (The New School and University of Essex) The following

More information

The Simplest Body in the Spinoza s Physics

The Simplest Body in the Spinoza s Physics The 3rd BESETO Conference of Philosophy Session 11 The Simplest Body in the Spinoza s Physics HYUN Young Jong Seoul National University Abstract In Spinoza s physics, there is a controversial concept,

More information

DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE

DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE BY MARK BOONE DALLAS, TEXAS APRIL 3, 2004 I. Introduction Soren

More information

VULNERABILITY AND SALVATION: LEVINAS AND ETHICAL TEACHING

VULNERABILITY AND SALVATION: LEVINAS AND ETHICAL TEACHING VULNERABILITY AND SALVATION: LEVINAS AND ETHICAL TEACHING Kim Abunuwara Utah Valley University Over the last twenty-five years the work of Emmanuel Levinas has been taken up by philosophers in North America

More information

The Boundaries of Hegel s Criticism of Kant s Concept of the Noumenal

The Boundaries of Hegel s Criticism of Kant s Concept of the Noumenal Arthur Kok, Tilburg The Boundaries of Hegel s Criticism of Kant s Concept of the Noumenal Kant conceives of experience as the synthesis of understanding and intuition. Hegel argues that because Kant is

More information

Edmund Husserl s Transcendental Phenomenology by Wendell Allan A. Marinay

Edmund Husserl s Transcendental Phenomenology by Wendell Allan A. Marinay Edmund Husserl s Transcendental Phenomenology by Wendell Allan A. Marinay We remember Edmund Husserl as a philosopher who had a great influence on known phenomenologists like Max Scheler, Edith Stein,

More information

NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 4)

NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 4) Fall 2009 Badiou course / John Protevi / Department of French Studies / Louisiana State University www.protevi.com/john/badiou/be_part4.pdf / protevi@lsu.edu 28 October 2009 / Classroom use only / Not

More information

This is a repository copy of Making Modal Distinctions: Kant on the possible, the actual, and the intuitive intellect..

This is a repository copy of Making Modal Distinctions: Kant on the possible, the actual, and the intuitive intellect.. This is a repository copy of Making Modal Distinctions: Kant on the possible, the actual, and the intuitive intellect.. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/81838/

More information

From Levinas radio interview, The Face

From Levinas radio interview, The Face The following are my translations of parts of two essays, The Face, and The Responsibility for Others, in L Ethique et L Infini, collected interviews of Emmanuel Levinas. My translations of these excerpts

More information

Philosophy in Review XXXIII (2013), no. 5

Philosophy in Review XXXIII (2013), no. 5 Robert Stern Understanding Moral Obligation. Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2012. 277 pages $90.00 (cloth ISBN 978 1 107 01207 3) In his thoroughly researched and tightly

More information

1/10. The Fourth Paralogism and the Refutation of Idealism

1/10. The Fourth Paralogism and the Refutation of Idealism 1/10 The Fourth Paralogism and the Refutation of Idealism The Fourth Paralogism is quite different from the three that preceded it because, although it is treated as a part of rational psychology, it main

More information

THE CRISIS OF THE SCmNCES AS EXPRESSION OF THE RADICAL LIFE-CRISIS OF EUROPEAN HUMANITY

THE CRISIS OF THE SCmNCES AS EXPRESSION OF THE RADICAL LIFE-CRISIS OF EUROPEAN HUMANITY Contents Translator's Introduction / xv PART I THE CRISIS OF THE SCmNCES AS EXPRESSION OF THE RADICAL LIFE-CRISIS OF EUROPEAN HUMANITY I. Is there, in view of their constant successes, really a crisis

More information

A Philosophical Study of Nonmetaphysical Approach towards Human Existence

A Philosophical Study of Nonmetaphysical Approach towards Human Existence Hinthada University Research Journal, Vo. 1, No.1, 2009 147 A Philosophical Study of Nonmetaphysical Approach towards Human Existence Tun Pa May Abstract This paper is an attempt to prove why the meaning

More information

Jacob Martin Rump, PhD Symposium: Contemporary Work in Phenomenology Boston Phenomenology Circle Boston University, 1 April 2016

Jacob Martin Rump, PhD Symposium: Contemporary Work in Phenomenology Boston Phenomenology Circle Boston University, 1 April 2016 Comments on George Heffernan s Keynote The Question of a Meaningful Life as a Limit Problem of Phenomenology and on Husserliana 42 (Grenzprobleme der Phänomenologie) Jacob Martin Rump, PhD Symposium: Contemporary

More information

Week 3: Negative Theology and its Problems

Week 3: Negative Theology and its Problems Week 3: Negative Theology and its Problems K. Barth, The Epistle to the Romans, 1919, 21922 (ET: 1968) J.-L. Marion, God without Being, 1982 J. Macquarrie, In Search of Deity. Essay in Dialectical Theism,

More information

24.01 Classics of Western Philosophy

24.01 Classics of Western Philosophy 1 Plan: Kant Lecture #2: How are pure mathematics and pure natural science possible? 1. Review: Problem of Metaphysics 2. Kantian Commitments 3. Pure Mathematics 4. Transcendental Idealism 5. Pure Natural

More information

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS SECOND SECTION by Immanuel Kant TRANSITION FROM POPULAR MORAL PHILOSOPHY TO THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS... This principle, that humanity and generally every

More information

Pedagogical Responsibility and the Third: Levinasian Considerations for Social Justice Pedagogies

Pedagogical Responsibility and the Third: Levinasian Considerations for Social Justice Pedagogies 238 : Levinasian Considerations for Social Justice Pedagogies Matt Jackson Brigham Young University The third party is other than the neighbor but also another neighbor, and also a neighbor of the other,

More information

Epistemology and sensation

Epistemology and sensation Cazeaux, C. (2016). Epistemology and sensation. In H. Miller (ed.), Sage Encyclopaedia of Theory in Psychology Volume 1, Thousand Oaks: Sage: 294 7. Epistemology and sensation Clive Cazeaux Sensation refers

More information

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink Abstract. We respond to concerns raised by Langdon Gilkey. The discussion addresses the nature of theological thinking

More information

Investigating the concept of despair and its relation with sin in Kierkegaard's view

Investigating the concept of despair and its relation with sin in Kierkegaard's view International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences Online: 2015-01-03 ISSN: 2300-2697, Vol. 45, pp 55-60 doi:10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilshs.45.55 2015 SciPress Ltd., Switzerland Investigating the

More information

The Unmoved Mover (Metaphysics )

The Unmoved Mover (Metaphysics ) The Unmoved Mover (Metaphysics 12.1-6) Aristotle Part 1 The subject of our inquiry is substance; for the principles and the causes we are seeking are those of substances. For if the universe is of the

More information

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works Title Disaggregating Structures as an Agenda for Critical Realism: A Reply to McAnulla Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4k27s891 Journal British

More information

The Groundwork, the Second Critique, Pure Practical Reason and Motivation

The Groundwork, the Second Critique, Pure Practical Reason and Motivation 金沢星稜大学論集第 48 巻第 1 号平成 26 年 8 月 35 The Groundwork, the Second Critique, Pure Practical Reason and Motivation Shohei Edamura Introduction In this paper, I will critically examine Christine Korsgaard s claim

More information

Fabrizio Luciano, Università degli Studi di Padova

Fabrizio Luciano, Università degli Studi di Padova Ferdinando G. Menga, L appuntamento mancato. Il giovane Heidegger e i sentieri interrotti della democrazia, Quodlibet, 2010, pp. 218, 22, ISBN 9788874623440 Fabrizio Luciano, Università degli Studi di

More information

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations University of Wisconsin Milwaukee UWM Digital Commons Theses and Dissertations May 2014 Freedom as Morality Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: http://dc.uwm.edu/etd

More information

The Other Half of Hegel s Halfwayness: A response to Dr. Morelli s Meeting Hegel Halfway. Ben Suriano

The Other Half of Hegel s Halfwayness: A response to Dr. Morelli s Meeting Hegel Halfway. Ben Suriano 1 The Other Half of Hegel s Halfwayness: A response to Dr. Morelli s Meeting Hegel Halfway Ben Suriano I enjoyed reading Dr. Morelli s essay and found that it helpfully clarifies and elaborates Lonergan

More information

Edinburgh Research Explorer

Edinburgh Research Explorer Edinburgh Research Explorer Review of Remembering Socrates: Philosophical Essays Citation for published version: Mason, A 2007, 'Review of Remembering Socrates: Philosophical Essays' Notre Dame Philosophical

More information

From Phenomenology to Theology: You Spin Me Round *

From Phenomenology to Theology: You Spin Me Round * META: RESEARCH IN HERMENEUTICS, PHENOMENOLOGY, AND PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY VOL. III, NO. 1 / JUNE 2011: 216-220, ISSN 2067-3655, www.metajournal.org From Phenomenology to Theology: You Spin Me Round * Sergiu

More information

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Monday 4:15 6:00; Wednesday 1-3; Thursday 2-3

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Monday 4:15 6:00; Wednesday 1-3; Thursday 2-3 A History of Philosophy: Nature, Certainty, and the Self Fall, 2014 Robert Kiely oldstuff@imsa.edu Office Hours: Monday 4:15 6:00; Wednesday 1-3; Thursday 2-3 Description How do we know what we know? Epistemology,

More information

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person Rosa Turrisi Fuller The Pluralist, Volume 4, Number 1, Spring 2009, pp. 93-99 (Article) Published by University of Illinois Press

More information

A RESPONSE TO "THE MEANING AND CHARACTERISTICS OF AN AMERICAN THEOLOGY"

A RESPONSE TO THE MEANING AND CHARACTERISTICS OF AN AMERICAN THEOLOGY A RESPONSE TO "THE MEANING AND CHARACTERISTICS OF AN AMERICAN THEOLOGY" I trust that this distinguished audience will agree that Father Wright has honored us with a paper that is both comprehensive and

More information

1/9. Leibniz on Descartes Principles

1/9. Leibniz on Descartes Principles 1/9 Leibniz on Descartes Principles In 1692, or nearly fifty years after the first publication of Descartes Principles of Philosophy, Leibniz wrote his reflections on them indicating the points in which

More information

A Multitude of Selves: Contrasting the Cartesian and Nietzschean views of selfhood

A Multitude of Selves: Contrasting the Cartesian and Nietzschean views of selfhood A Multitude of Selves: Contrasting the Cartesian and Nietzschean views of selfhood One s identity as a being distinct and independent from others is vital in order to interact with the world. A self identity

More information

1/8. Descartes 3: Proofs of the Existence of God

1/8. Descartes 3: Proofs of the Existence of God 1/8 Descartes 3: Proofs of the Existence of God Descartes opens the Third Meditation by reminding himself that nothing that is purely sensory is reliable. The one thing that is certain is the cogito. He

More information

Hegel's Critique of Contingency in Kant's Principle of Teleology

Hegel's Critique of Contingency in Kant's Principle of Teleology Florida International University FIU Digital Commons FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations University Graduate School 3-26-2014 Hegel's Critique of Contingency in Kant's Principle of Teleology Kimberly

More information

Process Thought and Bridge Building: A Response to Stephen K. White. Kevin Schilbrack

Process Thought and Bridge Building: A Response to Stephen K. White. Kevin Schilbrack Archived version from NCDOCKS Institutional Repository http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/asu/ Schilbrack, Kevin.2011 Process Thought and Bridge-Building: A Response to Stephen K. White, Process Studies 40:2 (Fall-Winter

More information

1/10. Descartes Laws of Nature

1/10. Descartes Laws of Nature 1/10 Descartes Laws of Nature Having traced some of the essential elements of his view of knowledge in the first part of the Principles of Philosophy Descartes turns, in the second part, to a discussion

More information

INTERPRETATION OF THE PROPOSITION COGITO ERGO SUM 1

INTERPRETATION OF THE PROPOSITION COGITO ERGO SUM 1 242 INTERPRETATION OF THE PROPOSITION COGITO ERGO SUM 1 1. THE COGITO OR THE ACCESS TO BEING THROUGH INTIMACY. The soul s discovery of its own inwardness 2 is constitutive of the soul itself. Not that

More information

Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy

Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy Res Cogitans Volume 5 Issue 1 Article 20 6-4-2014 Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy Kevin Harriman Lewis & Clark College Follow this and additional works at: http://commons.pacificu.edu/rescogitans

More information

The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas

The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas Douglas J. Den Uyl Liberty Fund, Inc. Douglas B. Rasmussen St. John s University We would like to begin by thanking Billy Christmas for his excellent

More information

Thought is Being or Thought and Being? Feuerbach and his Criticism of Hegel's Absolute Idealism by Martin Jenkins

Thought is Being or Thought and Being? Feuerbach and his Criticism of Hegel's Absolute Idealism by Martin Jenkins Thought is Being or Thought and Being? Feuerbach and his Criticism of Hegel's Absolute Idealism by Martin Jenkins Although he was once an ardent follower of the Philosophy of GWF Hegel, Ludwig Feuerbach

More information

EXISTENTIALISM. Wednesday, April 20, 16

EXISTENTIALISM. Wednesday, April 20, 16 EXISTENTIALISM DEFINITION... Philosophical, religious and artistic thought during and after World War II which emphasizes existence rather than essence, and recognizes the inadequacy of human reason to

More information

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies ST503 LESSON 10 of 24 John S. Feinberg, Ph.D. Experience: Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. This

More information

Christian Lotz, Commentary, SPEP 2009 Formal Indication and the Problem of Radical Philosophy in Heidegger

Christian Lotz, Commentary, SPEP 2009 Formal Indication and the Problem of Radical Philosophy in Heidegger Christian Lotz, Commentary, SPEP 2009 Formal Indication and the Problem of Radical Philosophy in Heidegger Introduction I would like to begin by thanking Leslie MacAvoy for her attempt to revitalize the

More information

Absolute Difference and Social Ontology: Levinas Face to Face with Buber and Fichte

Absolute Difference and Social Ontology: Levinas Face to Face with Buber and Fichte Human Studies 23: 227 241, 2000. ABSOLUTE DIFFERENCE AND SOCIAL ONTOLOGY 2000 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands. 227 Absolute Difference and Social Ontology: Levinas Face to Face with

More information

The Theory of Reality: A Critical & Philosophical Elaboration

The Theory of Reality: A Critical & Philosophical Elaboration 55 The Theory of Reality: A Critical & Philosophical Elaboration Anup Kumar Department of Philosophy Jagannath University Email: anupkumarjnup@gmail.com Abstract Reality is a concept of things which really

More information

Cartesian Rationalism

Cartesian Rationalism Cartesian Rationalism René Descartes 1596-1650 Reason tells me to trust my senses Descartes had the disturbing experience of finding out that everything he learned at school was wrong! From 1604-1612 he

More information

1/8. Leibniz on Force

1/8. Leibniz on Force 1/8 Leibniz on Force Last time we looked at the ways in which Leibniz provided a critical response to Descartes Principles of Philosophy and this week we are going to see two of the principal consequences

More information

INTRODUCTION: JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY

INTRODUCTION: JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY INTRODUCTION: JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY In celebration of the 90th birthday of Joseph Ratzinger, Communio s Summer 2017 issue commemorates this moment in the life of the pope emeritus

More information

Kant s Transcendental Idealism

Kant s Transcendental Idealism Kant s Transcendental Idealism Critique of Pure Reason Immanuel Kant Copernicus Kant s Copernican Revolution Rationalists: universality and necessity require synthetic a priori knowledge knowledge of the

More information

1/8. The Schematism. schema of empirical concepts, the schema of sensible concepts and the

1/8. The Schematism. schema of empirical concepts, the schema of sensible concepts and the 1/8 The Schematism I am going to distinguish between three types of schematism: the schema of empirical concepts, the schema of sensible concepts and the schema of pure concepts. Kant opens the discussion

More information

Cartesian Rationalism

Cartesian Rationalism Cartesian Rationalism René Descartes 1596-1650 Reason tells me to trust my senses Descartes had the disturbing experience of finding out that everything he learned at school was wrong! From 1604-1612 he

More information

CURRICULUM VITAE : Thomas Jack Lynch Teacher-Scholar Postdoctoral Fellow, Wake Forest University

CURRICULUM VITAE : Thomas Jack Lynch Teacher-Scholar Postdoctoral Fellow, Wake Forest University CURRICULUM VITAE STEVEN DELAY Wake Forest University Department of Philosophy Tribble Hall B306 stevendelay.com https://wfu.academia.edu/stevendelay delays@wfu.edu 336-758-2234 ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2018-2019:

More information

Man and the Presence of Evil in Christian and Platonic Doctrine by Philip Sherrard

Man and the Presence of Evil in Christian and Platonic Doctrine by Philip Sherrard Man and the Presence of Evil in Christian and Platonic Doctrine by Philip Sherrard Source: Studies in Comparative Religion, Vol. 2, No.1. World Wisdom, Inc. www.studiesincomparativereligion.com OF the

More information

Thinking the Abyss of History: Heidegger s Critique of Hegelian Metaphysics

Thinking the Abyss of History: Heidegger s Critique of Hegelian Metaphysics Thinking the Abyss of History: Heidegger s Critique of Hegelian Metaphysics Ryan Johnson Hegel s philosophy figures heavily in Heidegger s work. Indeed, when Heidegger becomes concerned with overcoming

More information

INTRODUCTION TO THINKING AT THE EDGE. By Eugene T. Gendlin, Ph.D.

INTRODUCTION TO THINKING AT THE EDGE. By Eugene T. Gendlin, Ph.D. INTRODUCTION TO THINKING AT THE EDGE By Eugene T. Gendlin, Ph.D. "Thinking At the Edge" (in German: "Wo Noch Worte Fehlen") stems from my course called "Theory Construction" which I taught for many years

More information

I SEMESTER B. A. PHILOSOPHY PHL1B 01- INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY QUESTION BANK FOR INTERNAL ASSESSMENT. Multiple Choice Questions

I SEMESTER B. A. PHILOSOPHY PHL1B 01- INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY QUESTION BANK FOR INTERNAL ASSESSMENT. Multiple Choice Questions I SEMESTER B. A. PHILOSOPHY PHL1B 01- INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY QUESTION BANK FOR INTERNAL ASSESSMENT Multiple Choice Questions 1. The total number of Vedas is. a) One b) Two c) Three d) Four 2. Philosophy

More information

1/24/2012. Philosophers of the Middle Ages. Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning

1/24/2012. Philosophers of the Middle Ages. Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning Dark or Early Middle Ages Begin (475-1000) Philosophers of the Middle Ages Psychology 390 Psychology of Learning Steven E. Meier, Ph.D. Formerly called the Dark Ages. Today called the Early Middle Ages.

More information

Freedom and servitude: the master and slave dialectic in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit

Freedom and servitude: the master and slave dialectic in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit Boston University OpenBU Theses & Dissertations http://open.bu.edu Boston University Theses & Dissertations 2014 Freedom and servitude: the master and slave dialectic in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit

More information

Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 7c The World

Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 7c The World Think by Simon Blackburn Chapter 7c The World Idealism Despite the power of Berkeley s critique, his resulting metaphysical view is highly problematic. Essentially, Berkeley concludes that there is no

More information

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000).

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000). Examining the nature of mind Michael Daniels A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000). Max Velmans is Reader in Psychology at Goldsmiths College, University of London. Over

More information

A Backdrop To Existentialist Thought

A Backdrop To Existentialist Thought A Backdrop To Existentialist Thought PROF. DAN FLORES DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE DANIEL.FLORES1@HCCS.EDU Existentialism... arose as a backlash against philosophical and scientific

More information

A Summary of Non-Philosophy

A Summary of Non-Philosophy Pli 8 (1999), 138-148. A Summary of Non-Philosophy FRANÇOIS LARUELLE The Two Problems of Non-Philosophy 1.1.1. Non-philosophy is a discipline born from reflection upon two problems whose solutions finally

More information

Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable

Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable by Manoranjan Mallick and Vikram S. Sirola Abstract The paper attempts to delve into the distinction Wittgenstein makes between factual discourse and moral thoughts.

More information

Reality. Abstract. Keywords: reality, meaning, realism, transcendence, context

Reality. Abstract. Keywords: reality, meaning, realism, transcendence, context META: RESEARCH IN HERMENEUTICS, PHENOMENOLOGY, AND PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY SPECIAL ISSUE / 2014: 21-27, ISSN 2067-365, www.metajournal.org Reality Jocelyn Benoist University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne Husserl

More information

Philosophy Courses-1

Philosophy Courses-1 Philosophy Courses-1 PHL 100/Introduction to Philosophy A course that examines the fundamentals of philosophical argument, analysis and reasoning, as applied to a series of issues in logic, epistemology,

More information

Levinas's Modern Sacred

Levinas's Modern Sacred Law Text Culture Volume 5 Issue 1 Law & The Sacred Article 8 January 2000 Levinas's Modern Sacred N. H. Smith Macquarie University Follow this and additional works at: http://ro.uow.edu.au/ltc Recommended

More information